The "Science" Of Getting Money For College [ And Engineering Your Way Through The Process]
As a science or engineering major, you may be eligible for specific scholarships, either at the schools you apply to or from outside sources. However, much of the available aid is awarded on the basis of financial need or merit, not on your choice of a major. So listen up—the suggestions below come from financial aid administrators. Follow them, and you and your parents may be surprised at the outcome. First, the “Golden Rule” of financial aid success: fill out your financial aid applications in a manner that is complete, accurate, and on time.
Before you apply
You may ultimately make a decision based on cost, but don’t begin by assuming one school will cost you more than another—regardless of the prices listed in catalogs.
“I can’t afford a private college or university,” you say? In many cases, it costs no more to go to a private college than a state school. For low-income students, it may cost less to go to a private school. Your parents may not believe this, so you will have to make sure they don’t write off private colleges without even comparing the actual costs. Also, if your parents have not been to college, they may need your help in researching how the financial aid system works.
Tips on applying
Meet deadlines. You snooze, you lose. Know the deadlines for the schools you are applying to and ask which applications get priority. In some schools, it’s first-come, first-served: funds are awarded as applications are received. In other schools, applications that come in after a specific deadline receive lower priority. By meeting or beating deadlines, you’ll also have your award notices back from schools in time to compare offers between colleges (and perhaps even negotiate a better deal).
Warn your parents. In order to fill out financial aid forms, your parents will have to do their taxes earlier than they have probably ever done them before, preferably in early January. But don’t use estimated data! Using estimated data on the FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid) can delay your application and lead to problems if the estimates aren’t accurate. Your parents will moan and groan, but be sure the information you provide is correct.
Neatness/completeness. Financial aid administrators are constantly horrified by what students submit: applications that are coffee-stained, written in pencil, illegible, sloppy, or incomplete. You say you’re interested in studying science or engineering in college? Pretend this is your first class assignment.
Ask for help. Call the financial aid office at the school if you have any questions. Many schools have 800 numbers. Don’t think, “Oh, they’re going to think I’m so dumb if I ask that.” It’s much easier for them to answer your question while you’re filling out forms in the middle of December than to have to call you back in March.
Keep copies. Keep a folder with a copy of every application you fill out. You may need to refer to it later.
The FAFSA. Everyone should file the FAFSA (in English or Spanish). Check out each college’s priority deadline for aid and your state’s deadline for state aid. Don’t miss them! The FAFSA determines your eligibility for federal loans and grants and for most state loan, grant, and scholarship programs. Even if your family has a high income, fill out the FAFSA. It makes you eligible for aid from the school’s own funds and for federal education loans at low interest rates. File it as soon after January 1 as possible, right after your parents get their taxes done.
You can file the paper form or file online at www.fafsa.ed.gov. Double check your application to be sure your social security number, the spelling of your name, and the date of your birth are correct. FAFSA has a great helpline: 1-800-433-3243.
CSS PROFILE. This form is used by many private colleges to award aid from their own funds. It asks different questions than the FAFSA. You can fill out the CSS PROFILE online at www.collegeboard.com. Or call 1-800-778-6888 ($5 to register online/$7 by phone, plus $18 per school).
Local scholarships. Local organizations want to give their money to local students. Take the time to apply—many students don’t. Check with your high school guidance office, your town hall, your congressman, and local organizations such as the Rotary or Lions clubs. Ask each school what their policy is toward these “outside awards.” Many schools used to deduct the money from the grant they gave you, leaving you no better off, but many schools now deduct it from the amount your family needs to pay or the amount you need to borrow.
Get help online. Financial aid information is available at:
• www.finaid.com
• www.studentaid.ed.gov (English or Spanish)
• www.fafsa.ed.gov (see box below)
• www.nasfaa.org (the National Association of Financial Aid Administrators website—click on “Parents and Students”)
• www.collegeboard.com/parents—click on “Pay for College.”
Search for scholarships on the Web. Some scholarship search sites (like www.fastweb.com) are completely free, while others (like PC&U’s www.collegexpress.com) charge only a small fee. As a general rule, it is not necessary to use expensive scholarship search services, as the same information is readily available elsewhere for little or no cost.
Tax credits and tax deductions. There are two tax credits and eight different tax deductions for college costs. Go to the Internal Revenue Service website at www.irs.gov and search for Publication 970, “Tax Benefits for Education.” Or call 1-800-829-3676 and request Publication 970.
Tips on making a final decision
Compare offers. Compare the true cost to you of each aid package. Which expenses are taken into account (i.e. travel, books, full room and board)? How much of the aid is in grants that do not need to be repaid? What will happen with outside awards—that is, scholarships? Ask if any grant or aid money from the school requires you to maintain a certain grade point average in order to have it renewed each year. If so, be careful: a grade point average higher than 3.5 can be difficult to maintain. For a chart you can use to compare your aid offers, go to www.collegeboard.com/parents and click on “Pay for College,” then “Compare Aid Awards.”
Speak up! Never take anything from the financial aid office as gospel. Call and make your case for a better aid package. Always be polite. Supply any facts on your family’s financial situation that would strengthen your case, and ask about any merit awards that might be added to your package. If you did exceptionally well your final semester in high school, let them know, as they won’t yet have those grades and might award you additional merit aid.
Ask about employment on campus. Jobs are often available even if you have not been given a work-study award.
Look beyond the aid package when deciding on a school. If school “A” is giving you a better package, but school “B” is the school you really want to attend, it might be worth it to you and your family to sacrifice a little more. As a science or engineering major, the likelihood is that even if you have to borrow more now, in the long run getting the best education will more than pay off.
Deborah Knight, a freelance writer based in San Diego, is a frequent contributor to PC&U’s Science & Engineering edition.
Tips for filing the FAFSA online:
• The official Department of Education site is www.fafsa.ed.gov. Filing is free, so don’t let yourself be tricked into using one of the sound-alike sites that may charge you $50 or more.
• If you enter your e-mail address, you will receive your approved application back only via e-mail, so check your e-mail every day (you’ll get a response within a week). Watch out: spamblockers will filter out the e-mail they send you. Don’t delete the application by mistake.
• You and your parents must “sign” the form electronically with separate PIN numbers. Well before you fill out the FAFSA, apply for these numbers at www.pin.ed.gov. If you leave off the PIN, your application will not be processed, and you could miss the deadline.










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